Bunny, after the war, recounted this meeting, describing how Inayat was wearing a green oilskin coat.

He also remembered that during the flight he left his transmitter ‘on’ and broadcast his intercom messages to his two passengers over the radio to all and sundry.

The operation that night involved two Lysanders.

James ‘Mac’ McCairns landed first at the farmer’s field near Angers on the Loire, followed by Rymills.

Inayat with two of the agents made their way to Paris and joined the Physician resistance network.

Over the next six weeks all the Physician network wireless operators were arrested by the German counter-espionage organisation, the Sicherheitsdienst (SD), along with other network personnel.

Inayat rejected an offer to return to England and as the only remaining wireless operator in Paris, she continued to transmit messages to London.

The SD used wireless detection vans and Inayat could only safely transmit for 20 minutes in one place, but managed by moving from place to place to avoid capture.

However, she was eventually betrayed to the Germans by either Henri Dericourt, a double agent, or by the sister of a resistance worker who was allegedly paid 100,000 francs to inform on Inayat’s movements.

On or about October 13, she was arrested and interrogated at the SD headquarters at 84 Avenue Foch in Paris.

On her arrest,she fought so fiercely that the SD classified her as extremely dangerous.

On November 25, she escaped, but was soon captured.

She was imprisoned in Germany and for ten months was kept shackled at hands and feet.

On September 11, 1944, she, with three other female agents, was moved to Dachau concentration camp and two days later she was executed.

She was posthumously awarded the George Cross and on November 8, 2012, a bronze bust of Noor Inayat Khan was unveiled in Gordon Square Gardens, London.

:: This article, written by David Coxon, Tangmere Military Aviation Museum’s curator, is the 23rd in a series of monthly articles on the people of RAF Tangmere.

More information on the museum, including opening times and entry prices can be found on our website: www.tangmere-museum.org.uk